Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where X. P. Zhang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by X. P. Zhang.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

State-Independent Experimental Test of Quantum Contextuality with a Single Trapped Ion

X. P. Zhang; Mark Um; Junhua Zhang; Shuoming An; Ye Wang; Dong-Ling Deng; Chao Shen; L. M. Duan; Kihwan Kim

Using a single trapped ion, we have experimentally demonstrated state-independent violation of a recent version of the Kochen-Specker inequality in a three-level system (qutrit) that is intrinsically indivisible. Three ground states of the (171)Yb(+) ion representing a qutrit are manipulated with high fidelity through microwaves and detected with high efficiency through a two-step quantum jump technique. Qutrits constitute the most fundamental system to show quantum contextuality and our experiment represents the first one that closes the detection efficiency loophole for experimental tests of quantum contextuality in such a system.


Physical Review A | 2017

Quantum implementation of the unitary coupled cluster for simulating molecular electronic structure

Yangchao Shen; X. P. Zhang; Shuaining Zhang; Jing-Ning Zhang; Man-Hong Yung; Kihwan Kim

In classical computational chemistry, the coupled-cluster ansatz is one of the most commonly used


Scientific Reports | 2013

Experimental Certification of Random Numbers via Quantum Contextuality

Mark Um; X. P. Zhang; Junhua Zhang; Ye Wang; Shen Yangchao; Dong-Ling Deng; L. M. Duan; Kihwan Kim

ab~initio


Nature Communications | 2015

Time reversal and charge conjugation in an embedding quantum simulator

X. P. Zhang; Yangchao Shen; Junhua Zhang; J. Casanova; Lucas Lamata; E. Solano; Man-Hong Yung; Jing-Ning Zhang; Kihwan Kim

methods, which is critically limited by its non-unitary nature. The unitary modification as an ideal solution to the problem is, however, extremely inefficient in classical conventional computation. Here, we provide the first experimental evidence that indeed the unitary version of the coupled cluster ansatz can be reliably performed in physical quantum system, a trapped ion system. We perform a simulation on the electronic structure of a molecular ion (HeH


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Realization of geometric Landau-Zener-Stückelberg interferometry

Junhua Zhang; Jing-Ning Zhang; X. P. Zhang; Kihwan Kim

^+


New Journal of Physics | 2018

Verification of the quantum nonequilibrium work relation in the presence of decoherence

Andrew M. Smith; Yao Lu; Shuoming An; X. P. Zhang; Jing Ning Zhang; Zongping Gong; H. T. Quan; Christopher Jarzynski; Kihwan Kim

), where the ground-state energy surface curve is probed, energies of excited-states are studied and the bond-dissociation is simulated non-perturbatively. Our simulation takes advantages from quantum computation to overcome the intrinsic limitations in classical computation and our experimental results indicate that the method is promising for preparing molecular ground-states for quantum simulation.


Nature Communications | 2018

Experimental quantum simulation of fermion-antifermion scattering via boson exchange in a trapped ion

X. P. Zhang; Kuan Zhang; Yangchao Shen; Shuaining Zhang; Jing-Ning Zhang; Man-Hong Yung; J. Casanova; Julen S. Pedernales; Lucas Lamata; E. Solano; Kihwan Kim

The intrinsic unpredictability of measurements in quantum mechanics can be used to produce genuine randomness. Here, we demonstrate a random number generator where the randomness is certified by quantum contextuality in connection with the Kochen-Specker theorem. In particular, we generate random numbers from measurements on a single trapped ion with three internal levels, and certify the generated randomness by showing a bound on the minimum entropy through observation of violation of the Klyachko-Can-Binicioglu-Shumovsky (KCBS) inequality. Concerning the test of the KCBS inequality, we close the detection efficiency loophole for the first time and make it relatively immune to the compatibility loophole. In our experiment, we generate 1 × 105 random numbers that are guaranteed to have 5.2 × 104 bits of minimum entropy with a 99% confidence level.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Corrigendum: Experimental Certification of Random Numbers via Quantum Contextuality

Mark Um; X. P. Zhang; Junhua Zhang; Ye Wang; Yangchao Shen; Dong-Ling Deng; Lu-Ming Duan; Kihwan Kim

A quantum simulator is an important device that may soon outperform current classical computations. A basic arithmetic operation, the complex conjugate, however, is considered to be impossible to be implemented in such a quantum system due to the linear character of quantum mechanics. Here, we present the experimental quantum simulation of such an unphysical operation beyond the regime of unitary and dissipative evolutions through the embedding of a quantum dynamics in the electronic multilevels of a 171Yb+ ion. We perform time reversal and charge conjugation, which are paradigmatic examples of antiunitary symmetry operators, in the evolution of a Majorana equation without the tomographic knowledge of the evolving state. Thus, these operations can be applied regardless of the system size. Our approach offers the possibility to add unphysical operations to the toolbox of quantum simulation, and provides a route to efficiently compute otherwise intractable quantities, such as entanglement monotones.


Chinese Science Bulletin | 2018

Operational effects of the UNOT gate on classical and quantum correlations

Kuan Zhang; Jiajun Ma; X. P. Zhang; Jayne Thompson; Vlatko Vedral; Kihwan Kim; Mile Gu

We propose a new type of interferometry, based on geometric phases accumulated by a periodically driven two-level system undergoing multiple Landau-Zener transitions. As a specific example, we study its implementation in a superconducting charge pump. We find that interference patterns appear as a function of the pumping frequency and the phase bias, and clearly manifest themselves in the pumped charge. We also show that the effects described should persist in the presence of realistic decoherence.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Implementation of Quantum Plug and Play Protocol in a Trapped Ion System

Kuan Zhang; X. P. Zhang; Yangchao Shen; Yao Lu; Shuaining Zhang; Jiajun Ma; Kihwan Kim; Mile Gu; Jayne Thompson; Vlatko Vedral

Although nonequilibrium work and fluctuation relations have been studied in detail within classical statistical physics, extending these results to open quantum systems has proven to be conceptually difficult. For systems that undergo decoherence but not dissipation, we argue that it is natural to define quantum work exactly as for isolated quantum systems, using the two-point measurement protocol. Complementing previous theoretical analysis using quantum channels, we show that the nonequilibrium work relation remains valid in this situation, and we test this assertion experimentally using a system engineered from an optically trapped ion. Our experimental results reveal the work relations validity over a variety of driving speeds, decoherence rates, and effective temperatures and represent the first confirmation of the work relation for non-unitary dynamics.

Collaboration


Dive into the X. P. Zhang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. Solano

University of the Basque Country

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge